Serv-U FTP Server is a Web, mobile device, SFTP, and FTPS file transfer server. It handles hundreds of GBs per day and thousands of users. The advanced Web interface permits transfer of multiple, large files in a single operation. It supports mobile devices including iPad, iPhone, and Android, as well as IPv6, FIPS 140-2, and more.

FileRunner is a two-pane file manager for Unix. It is simple and efficient and has a built-in FTP/SFTP/adb client. It does a reasonable (and improving) job on Windows systems. It features a simple and powerful interface, history and Hotlist (bookmarks), a recursive directory menu of the entire filesystem tree, browsing FTP, sFTP, and adb directories as easily as normal directories, asynchronous file transfers, cached directory listings, asynchronous file operations, built-in command shell windows synchronized with file panels, extensibility by adding your own command buttons, and user-defined file pattern/actions.

sydep is a tool for simple deployment over rsync. In combination GIT it is very powerful instrument. It provides three actions: init, push, and pull. init creates config files for sydep in the current directory. These are sydep.cfg, which contains connection details, and .sydepignore, which specifies files to ignore. push uploads files from the working directory to the server. pull downloads existing files from the server. It downloads only those files which are already in the working directory.

Universal File Mover (UFM) manages the transfer of files. The user combines a series of Action commands to create the UFM Workflow XML file. These Action commands define which actions are to be taken, the order of the actions, and how errors are to be handled. UFM processes the Action commands as per the UFM Workflow XML file. UFM currently contains 41 Action commands. These action commands fall into five categories: WebSphere MQ Actions, Network Actions, File Actions, Control Actions, and Other Actions. UFM can transfer files in one of five ways, using WebSphere MQ, FTP, SFTP, SCP, or HTTP.

TCPWebLog is a system that collects and aggregates Apache and Varnish Web server logs from multiple Linux computers. It uses a simple "client" program that pipes logs to a central server over a TCP connection, and a "server" program that receive the logs and quickly aggregates or splits them.

Emperor is a Commander-style (“orthodox”) file manager for the GNOME desktop. Unlike similar programs such as GNOME Commander or mc, it uses GIO to integrate with the GNOME desktop and take advantage of GVfs-FUSE.

WAWAS is a full PHP application server.
The main server core listens to any IP/port and passes data to any mounted protocol on the listener. Implemented protocols are HTTP1.1/1.0, Comet, Telnet, DNS, mail, and FTP. Each protocol runs modules that build response data based on the requests. Memory object persistence allows data and caches to be shared across protocols or time. All configuration uses XML. It can be launched as a daemon, with or without forked workers, and is nearly as fast as Apache in preliminary tests.